Involution Ocean Audiobook By Bruce Sterling cover art

Involution Ocean

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Involution Ocean

By: Bruce Sterling
Narrated by: Stephen Graybill
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About this listen

A far-future Moby-Dick by the author of Schismatrix: A desperate addict on a bleak, arid planet boards a whaling vessel to hunt the drug he craves.

The powerful narcotic syncophine, commonly known as Flare, comes from only one source: the oil of the gargantuan whale-like beasts that swim the dust sea of Nullaqua. It was John Newhouse’s addiction to the substance that made him a dealer and forced him to move to this airless, inhospitable planet. But when the all-powerful galactic Confederacy declares Flare illegal, the needs of Newhouse and his clientele leave the desperate off-worlder no choice but to sign on as an able seaman aboard a dustwhaler and hunt the giant creatures himself. Joining a crew of junkies and misfits, including a mad captain with his own dark and secret agenda and a bewitching, batlike alien woman who is pained by human touch, Newhouse sets out across the silica ocean at the bottom of a seventy-mile-deep crater in search of release and redemption . . . and sails toward a fateful confrontation between man and beast that could lead to catastrophe.

Bruce Sterling’s debut novel is a remarkable feat of world building—imaginative, provocative, and smart, featuring an unforgettable cast of colorful characters. If Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick unfolded on Frank Herbert’s Dune, the result might be something akin to Sterling’s extraordinary Involution Ocean.

©1977 Bruce Sterling (P)2020 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.
Adventure Fantasy Fiction First Contact Science Fiction Sea Adventures Space Opera Space Emotionally Gripping
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Critic reviews

“An absolutely stunning tour de force.” (Harlan Ellison)

“Sterling joins the ranks of those daring science fiction creators who invent futures of startling complexity.” (Locus)

“Sterling has expanded my mind. . . . He’s better than drugs—there’s none of the nasty side-effects.” (John Shirley, screenwriter of The Crow)

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I miss Bruce Sterling

one of my favorite and unfortunately not very prolific authors. every book is different. everyone is a joy

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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Not what I expected.

I’m not sure what I was really looking for when I listened to this but it was far beyond what I had expected. Although the narrator was a little flat, the story made up for it. This is like nothing I have listened to. The world development and all around theme had me mesmerized and I hope to find more from this author for future listens. If you are looking for something out of the ordinary then give this a try, you won’t be disappointed.

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Only thing in common w/ Moby Dick is the blubber.

Lame, not lucid. The fiction is that there is any science involved, the irony is the author writes like one of the ignorant indigents he writes about. This is Dr. Seuss with bigger words, no rhyme, and clearly a lack of sobriety, just like the main protagonist. I would call the S&M relationship with the bat-girl gratuitous, but I can't think of anything that was meaningful. No plot, nothing sequitur, except it started, and ended, thank God.

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